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5 Ultra-Luxe Retreats Just Hours Away From India | Travel News

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Whether it’s a beachfront design hotel in Bali, an ultra-accessible atoll retreat in the Maldives, or a heritage escape in Sri Lanka, these places can feel like a grand adventure
Set on the turquoise waters of Kaafu Atoll, the JW Marriott Maldives Resort & Spa offers an indulgent island escape that’s surprisingly convenient for a short break.
With multiple long weekends approaching, there’s no better way to celebrate than by checking out, literally. For Indian couples and families seeking a break that’s both indulgent and practical, micro-retreats are the perfect answer: short international getaways with long-lasting memories. The key is choosing visa-friendly destinations with direct flights, quick transfers, and ultra-luxurious properties that allow you to switch off the moment you arrive. Here’s a curated list of luxury escapes just a few hours from home each offering immersive experiences, thoughtful hospitality, and unforgettable settings.
1. JW Marriott Kaafu Atoll Island Resort, Maldives
Visa for Indians: Visa-on-arrival (free, up to 90 days)
Set on the turquoise waters of Kaafu Atoll, the JW Marriott Maldives Resort & Spa offers an indulgent island escape that’s surprisingly convenient for a short break. The highlight? It’s just a 15-minute luxury speedboat ride from Malé International Airport, no long seaplane transfers required, a rare find in the Maldives.
This family- and couple-friendly retreat features overwater and beach pool villas, some with slides that drop straight into the ocean. Couples can indulge in sunrise yoga, floating breakfasts, and overwater spa rituals, while families are pampered with the Family by JW program, including a vibrant kids’ club, junior culinary sessions, and multi-generational activities.
Dining is equally elevated, with five distinct restaurants including a treetop Thai experience and beachfront Japanese-Peruvian fusion and wine pairings in an underwater-inspired wine room. For those craving both luxury and ease, JW Marriott Kaafu Atoll offers a seamlessly accessible island escape, perfect for a long weekend where every moment counts.
2. The Legian Seminyak, Bali
Visa for Indians: Visa-on-arrival (valid up to 30 days)
The Legian Seminyak is a refined beachfront sanctuary on Bali’s golden Seminyak Beach—where contemporary design meets timeless Indonesian charm. Just 30–40 minutes from Ngurah Rai International Airport, it offers the rare balance of peaceful seclusion with access to Bali’s most vibrant restaurants and beach clubs.
Designed by the late Jaya Ibrahim, the resort features 67 elegant ocean-facing suites and 14 private pool villas under the exclusive “The Club” wing. Guests can enjoy a three-tiered infinity pool, yoga by the sea, holistic treatments at the Legian Spa, and curated cultural experiences. Families benefit from spacious suites and interconnecting options, while couples can savor candlelit dinners and long walks along a private stretch of sand.
Its seamless blend of quiet sophistication and convenience makes it a perfect long-weekend escape with no visa hassles and everything from wellness to nightlife just steps away.
3. InterContinental Phu Quoc Long Beach Resort, Vietnam
Visa for Indians: Visa-free access to Phu Quoc (up to 30 days)
On the tranquil western shores of Vietnam’s Phu Quoc Island, the InterContinental Phu Quoc Long Beach Resort offers a luxurious yet effortless getaway. Indian travelers can enter visa-free, provided they stay on the island—making it ideal for spontaneous escapes.
The property boasts ocean-view rooms and private villas, a world-class HARNN spa, multiple dining venues including the rooftop INK 360 bar, and a Planet Trekkers kids’ club. Surrounded by jungle-fringed beaches and coral reefs, it also offers cultural excursions to pepper farms, fish sauce distilleries, and night markets.
Here, nature, wellness, and understated luxury converge—delivered with InterContinental’s signature polish. And with no paperwork required, it’s a seamless choice for a long weekend done right.
4. The Slate, Phuket, Thailand
Visa for Indians: Visa-on-arrival (up to 15 days)
Bold, artistic, and unapologetically unconventional, The Slate is one of Phuket’s most distinctive resorts—a creative vision by designer Bill Bensley. Just minutes from Phuket International Airport, it blends industrial-chic aesthetics with lush tropical landscaping.
The resort features design-led suites and pool villas, a serene Coqoon Spa, three pools (including one adults-only), and exceptional dining. Families will love the Tin Box kids’ club and family pool, while couples can enjoy Black Ginger, the award-winning restaurant accessible only by floating bridge and lit entirely by torchlight.
With Thailand’s straightforward visa-on-arrival policy, this edgy-yet-elegant property makes for a stylish, spontaneous escape that merges Thai heritage with modern creativity.
5. Amangalla, Galle, Sri Lanka
Visa for Indians: Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) on arrival
For travelers who value timeless charm and historical depth, Amangalla—set within the walls of the 17th-century Dutch Fort in Galle—is a rare gem. The resort exudes colonial elegance, from its antique-filled rooms and checkerboard verandas to its serene garden pool and Ayurvedic spa.
Guests can explore the cobbled lanes of Galle Fort, browse boutiques, enjoy high tea in the library, or embark on curated experiences such as whale watching and tea plantation visits. Amangalla is as much a journey back in time as it is a luxury stay, offering serenity and cultural immersion in equal measure.
With an easy ETA process and a short flight from southern India, it’s a micro-retreat that blends soul and sophistication.
Whether it’s a beachfront design hotel in Bali, an ultra-accessible atoll retreat in the Maldives, or a heritage escape in Sri Lanka, these destinations prove that even a 3–4 day getaway can feel like a grand adventure. With visa-on-arrival ease, world-class resorts, and curated experiences, all that’s left is to pack your bags and your wanderlust.
Swati Chaturvedi, a seasoned media and journalism aficionado with over 10 years of expertise, is not just a storyteller; she’s a weaver of wit and wisdom in the digital landscape. As a key figure in News18 Engl…Read More
Swati Chaturvedi, a seasoned media and journalism aficionado with over 10 years of expertise, is not just a storyteller; she’s a weaver of wit and wisdom in the digital landscape. As a key figure in News18 Engl… Read More
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Fatehpur Sikri, India, travel guide: Seven highlights to see

Seven wonders within Fatehpur Sikri, India
This monumental Mughal capital 37 kilometres outside Agra was founded in 1571 but lasted scant decades. The magnificently mournful ruins are one of India’s most underrated sights.
1 Make a grand entrance through Victory Gateway
As you lurch out of Agra, dodging cars and camel carts, your first sight of this ruined city is an immense hilltop gateway, one of the world’s biggest, wobbling like a mirage in the heat. Victory Gateway was built in 1602 from red sandstone and white marble to commemorate Emperor Akbar’s military triumphs, although its Persian inscription warns the world doesn’t last. This by itself qualifies as a mighty monument, and the views are splendid.
2 Pause in admiration inside the mosque
Step through the gateway into the courtyard of the Friday Mosque and you get the first impact of this tremendous ensemble. Everything is built of red sandstone, everything outsized, and yet the decorative detail – window frames, balconies, roof brackets – wonderfully carved. The mosque is one of India’s finest and largest and centres on the tomb of a Sufi, inlaid with mother-of-pearl. Local women come to tie strings on the marble lattice in hope of being granted children.
3 Check out the architecture in the Audience Hall
This gloriously startling building in the royal quarter is where Akbar consulted advisers. The Diwan-i-Khas has wall recesses that served as bookshelves for royal documents and texts. However, your eyes will surely be on the enormous and wildly ornate octagonal pillar of the main hall, which rises from the centre of the room like the handle of an umbrella and props up an elevated walkway that resembles the balcony in an opera house.
4 Look up in the Imperial Treasury
Fatehpur Sikri shows wide Hindu, Islamic and Persian influences but this genius building next to the Audience Hall takes inspiration from Jain temple architecture and decorative sculpture. Stone safes are concealed in the walls, but gaze up: the brackets that hold up the ceiling are embellished with mythical elephant-headed sea monsters, said to guard treasures in the depths of the ocean. In the fields behind, don’t miss the odd-looking spiky tower erected in memory of Akbar’s beloved elephant Hiran.
5 Enjoy the faded frescoes in Mariam’s House
The harem complex has several fine pavilions, some showing Turkish influences and others covered with depictions of swans and horses. The carvings and fretwork are so fine in places you could mistake sandstone for wood. If you’re pressed for time, head straight to Mariam’s House, perhaps the best example. As a bonus, it has bright and sometimes surreal gold-tinted frescoes – look out for the diaphanous woman riding a gigantic parrot.
6 Wander through the other imperial quarters
This is the most impressive part of Fatehpur Sikri, erupting in columns, latticed screens and elaborately decorated architectural elements, and graced with ornamental pools and clipped gardens. Persian verses loop across the emperor’s bedroom or House of Dreams, although judging from his innumerable concubines Akbar spent scant time on sleep. The pool below the elevated kiosk cooled the bedchamber. This is just one of numerous buildings that might take an hour or two to admire.
7 Close your guidebook and get lost
Fatehpur Sikri was planned in the smallest detail: servants’ quarters, lavatory blocks, fountain drainage, masonry rings to hold silk canopies for courtyard shading. Take time to inspect the detail and soak up the melancholy magnificence away from the main visitor axis. Birds wheel overhead and squirrels sun themselves on walls. In the late afternoon the sandstone turns crimson, then orange and subtle pink before the light fades on this abandoned city of lost dreams.
The writer travelled as a guest of Incredible India incredibleindia.gov.in and Malaysia Airlines malaysiaairlines.com
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Heavy rain alert in Delhi–Gurugram: IMD issues an orange alert; travel and safety advisory |

In a recent update, Delhi and its surrounding NCR cities, including Gurugram, Noida, and Faridabad, have received intense rainfall. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has issued an orange alert for Delhi while a warning of very heavy rainfall and thunderstorms has been issued for Gurugram.Keeping the current situation in view, the District Disaster Management Authority has issued a travel advisory for Gurugram for 2nd September 2025. It reads:On September 1, 2025, Gurugram recorded over 100 mm of rainfall between 3 PM and 7 PM. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has issued an Orange Alert, forecasting heavy to very heavy rainfall on September 2, 2025.In light of this warning:Corporate offices and private institutions in Gurugram district are advised to ask employees to work from home.
All schools in the district are directed to conduct online classes on September 2, 2025.On the other hand, Delhi too is experiencing non-stop rains which have caused waterlogging and long traffic across roads. Authorities are closely monitoring the Yamuna River too, which is expected to rise close to the danger mark of 206 metres on Tuesday. Low-lying areas are particularly vulnerable to flooding.India Meteorological Department forecastIn the present scenario, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) has issued an orange alert for Delhi for heavy rainfall. Similar alerts have been issued for NCR regions including Noida, Faridabad, and Gurugram. A yellow warning has been issued for Ghaziabad.Not only this, IMD has cautioned that northern India may experience heavy rainfall at least until September 5 especially for Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, and Punjab which are under red and orange alerts.Travel disrupted, airlines issue advisoryAirlines such as IndiGo, Air India, SpiceJet, and Akasa too have issued warnings and advised people of possible delays and cancellations due to poor visibility. Passengers are advised to check flight status before leaving the house.Advisory
It is advised to avoid flood-prone zones, underpasses, and Yamuna ghats.Use public transport.For those in Gurugram, work from home is strongly recommended on September 2 as safety of people is more important.Keep a check on official IMD and local weather updates before planning anything.
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National parks in Northeast India for rarest wildlife experiences

Northeast India, with its lush forests, rugged mountains, and pristine rivers, is a biodiversity hotspot offering unparalleled opportunities to encounter some of the world’s rarest wildlife. The region’s national parks and sanctuaries protect unique ecosystems and endangered species like the one-horned rhinoceros, red panda, clouded leopard and more. From Manas National Park and Tiger Reserve in Assam to Keibul Lamjao National Park in Manipur, find out what makes these national parks so unique, and what rare creatures these parks have in store for visitors.
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